drawing on Hall’s article on identity formation (and as always: keep previous articles in mind and use them for your own reflection if possible) elaborate how Islamophobia in the U.S. could provide nurturing grounds for Islamic fundamentalism to grow and spread. The NYT article “Muslims Being Confronted at Pool: We are Portrayed as Troublemakers” (July 26, 2018) will help you in understanding more deeply what Islamophobia means for everyday Muslims living in the U.S. These questions are particularily pressing during times of regular attacks against Muslims and the Muslim community in New Zealand, the U.S., and Europe.
10/21/18, 8(00 PMMuslims Describe Being Confronted at Pool: ‘Weʼre Portrayed as Troublemakersʼ – The New York Times
Page 1 of 4https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/26/us/muslim-children-pool-wilmington.html
U.S.
| Muslims Describe Being Confronted at Pool: ‘We’re Portrayed as Troublemakers’
By Melissa Gomez
July 26, 2018
Tahsiyn Ismaa’eel was determined to get her campers a full day in the pool.
Ms. Ismaa’eel, the director of Darul Amaanah Academy in Wilmington, Del., can see
the closest city pool, Foster Brown, from the school’s back door. It’s where she has
taken children attending the school’s summer Arabic literacy program for the past
three years, usually three times a week.
But this summer was different. Since late June, the group was harassed on at least
six occasions because of the children’s attire or barred from entering the pool
entirely, Ms. Ismaa’eel said. Staff members had begun citing an unposted rule
prohibiting cotton clothing in the pool, she said, seemingly targeting her campers, a
majority of whom are observant Muslims who dress modestly and wore long shorts
or tights, T-shirts and headscarves to go swimming.
On July 16, she tried one more time. The group arrived and was told the pool was at
capacity, Ms. Ismaa’eel said. She and the children waited until a family left and they
were allowed to enter, but the facility closed shortly after, and everyone was forced to
leave.
She now takes her students to another pool, Eden Park, 10 minutes away, where their
attire hasn’t been questioned.
“There’s no point in going back,” Ms. Ismaa’eel said in an interview. “We’re portrayed
as troublemakers when in fact, there was never a policy in writing.”
Muslims Describe Being Confronted at
Pool: ‘We’re Portrayed as Troublemakers’
U.S.
https://www.nytimes.com/
https://www.nytimes.com/section/us
10/21/18, 8(00 PMMuslims Describe Being Confronted at Pool: ‘Weʼre Portrayed as Troublemakersʼ – The New York Times
Page 2 of 4https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/26/us/muslim-children-pool-wilmington.html
[Racism at American swimming pools isn’t new: Here’s a look at the long history.]
She said she was focusing on keeping her campers busy so they don’t dwell on what
happened. “They definitely feel like there’s something wrong with them being
Muslim,” she
said.
You have 4 free articles remaining.
Subscribe to The New York Times
Parents of some of the children say they’ve struggled to explain to them why their
clothes were being questioned.
“My children literally sat on the side of the pool each time and cried,” said Mia Miller,
whose two daughters, ages 5 and 6, have special needs and were at the pool during
some of the encounters.
Muslim Advocates, a national advocacy group, sent the city a cease-and-desist letter
last week on the school’s behalf, saying that state and federal anti-discrimination
laws had been violated and calling for an investigation.
Mayor Mike Purzycki of Wilmington has apologized to the children. John Rago, the
mayor’s deputy chief of staff, confirmed that the rules and regulations posted at city
pools only prohibit cutoff jeans and that there is no mention of cotton clothing. (He
also said the temporary pool closure on July 16 was because of a medical emergency
involving a lifeguard.)
Mr. Rago said the city was taking the allegations seriously and investigating. He
added that the city’s Muslim community has been invited to help review and update
the pool policies, and that staff members will receive training “so there is nothing left
to individual interpretation.”
https://www.nytimes.com/subscription/inyt/lp87JWU.html?campaignId=7U9UW
https://www.muslimadvocates.org/wp-content/uploads/2018.07.19-Cease-and-Desist-Foster-Brown-Pool
10/21/18, 8(00 PMMuslims Describe Being Confronted at Pool: ‘Weʼre Portrayed as Troublemakersʼ – The New York Times
Page 3 of 4https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/26/us/muslim-children-pool-wilmington.html
For the remainder of the city’s pool season, which runs until Aug. 18, there will be a
“very liberal policy in place regarding proper swimwear without restrictions on the
types of fabrics worn,” Mr. Rago said.
The pool manager at Foster Brown who confronted Ms. Ismaa’eel has been
reassigned to administrative duties, Mr. Rago said.
Ms. Ismaa’eel said she and more than a dozen campers arrived at the pool around 3
p.m. on June 25, the first day city pools were open. The pool staff began to ask her
and her daughter when they planned to leave, and they became uncomfortable, she
said.
The pool manager, Glenda Pinkett, confronted her and told her the pool had a “no
cotton” policy and the children could no longer swim there. Ms. Pinkett also called
some of the children derogatory names, according to the cease-and-desist letter.
They left within the hour, Ms. Ismaa’eel said.
“It’s never been an issue,” said Ms. Ismaa’eel, who grew up in Wilmington and swam
in T-shirts and shorts as a child.
Ms. Pinkett could not be reached for comment. She previously told The News
Journal of Wilmington that she believed cotton clothes could clog pool filters, but
admitted there was no written policy. “Nobody was discriminated,” she told the
publication. “As I did with all our patrons, we asked them to not wear cotton.”
In a statement this month, Mayor Purzycki said the city used poor judgment in
asking the children to leave because of their clothing. “We also referred to vaguely
worded pool policies to assess and then justify our poor judgment, and that was also
wrong,” he said.
Nadirah Salaam said she was angry when she found out her 10-year-old daughter
had been part of the group whose clothes were questioned.
https://www.delawareonline.com/story/news/local/2018/07/16/wilmington-pool-muslim-swimmers-discrimination-delaware/790050002/
https://www.wilmingtonde.gov/Home/Components/News/News/3021/225
10/21/18, 8(00 PMMuslims Describe Being Confronted at Pool: ‘Weʼre Portrayed as Troublemakersʼ – The New York Times
Page 4 of 4https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/26/us/muslim-children-pool-wilmington.html
“I told her if someone ever treats you like that ever again, don’t be mean to them,
just explain to them why you’re covered,” she said. “Because they might not know.”
Follow Melissa Gomez on Twitter: @MelissaGomez004.
King ruling
incites L.A
.
violence
‘BYJIMMULVANEY
‘Newsday
LOS ANGELES At 3:15 Wedne
s
day afternoon the jury foreman starte
d
to read out the not verdicts acquitting police beating
Rodney King It was “a verdict th
at
seemed to fly in the face of an o
ft
broadcastamateurvideotape that showed
the four white policemen beating the
seemingly helpless black suspect
Within six hours Mayor Tom Brad
ley had declared a state of emergency
Gov Pete Wilson had called out the
National Guard’and a spree of looting
arson and random killings moved into
high gear On Thursday a duskcurfew was ordered By Friday afte
r
noon U.S. Marines and Army troops
were deployed in staging areas ready to
put down the worst riots in the historyo
f
this troubled city
When I heard the verdict the first
thing I did was checkmy pistol checked
my ammo said Jay Harvey a liquor
store owner Then I thought about
it
See KING page 6.
‘BY JIM MULVANEY
I
‘ofdlleg f b ting
g .I “w t
seemed’to”fly m
broadcastamateurvideotapethatshowed
s
Wils n
Guard and
M rin s
‘
w striots
thislroubled
ch ckmy cl ecked
KINqpqge
. .
‘
‘
‘
–
:
¬
,
–
, ¬
–
.
“
–
.
, ¬
,
.
,
‘ ,
.
– –
. ¬
, .
.
”
,
.
”
,
,
, ”
, –
. ” ,
, .
:
.
. .
‘ .
: ‘
. – ,
: ‘
( ,
, -.
.
‘
‘ ‘ :. _
.
.
”
.
: :
,
‘
”
.
.
,
.
. ‘
.
.
, ,
:
;
.
‘ ‘
!
,
,
.
.
.
”
Rioting destroys many businesses in Koreatown
and predominately black neighborhoods in Calif.
KING from page 1.
jumped in my car and went right to
the gun rack and got out the artil
lery. Everyone knew it would be
bad.
Harvey who on Friday proudly
displayed three rifles a shotgun and
several ammo boxes behind the
counter of his store admitted he
was surprised that the rioting was
as
prolonged and widespread as it was.
And Saturday after a compara
tively peaceful Friday night as the
city seemed to breathe a sigh of
relief and started to rebuild it also
began to look at exactly what hap
pened how seemingly justified
protests exploded into days of ter
ror.
While the cause of the explosion
will take time to determine the
leading factors appear to be a com
bination of the near-complete sur
prise of the verdict the volatile mix
ofa large disaffected and disjointed
minority community the toll of
poverty drug addiction and despair
slow police reaction and inefficient
deployment of the National Guard.
A picture has begun to emerge on
how the violence started escalated
out of control and by Saturday had
seemingly petered out.
This account is compiled from
media accounts and staff reporting
At 12:30a.m. March 1991Los
Angeles police stopped 25-year-old
Rodney King after a high-speed car
chase. Police said he resisted and
four officers had to beat him into
submission while 11 more cops
looked on. An unseen bystander
George Holliday recorded 81 se
c
onds of the vicious beating on vid
eotape and sold it the following day
televisionstationfor$500.
Within hours it was broadcast
around the nation. EvenPoIice Chief
Daryl Gates a pugnacious man not
known for racial sensitivity apolo
gized for the beating calling it an
“aberration.
The four officers seen in the vid
eotape were indicted on felony
charges 12 days later. A political
storm with heavy racial overtones
erupted and Bradley one of the
longest blackmayors in the
country attempted to force Gates
out of his protected civil-service
job. Gates eventually announced he
would retire next month.
IIi November Los Angeles
County Superior Court Judge
Stanley Weisberg announced that
he was moving the trial to Simi Valley
in suburban Ventura County because
press coverage would make it impos
sible to pick an unbiased jury in Los
Angeles.
Simi Valley 40 miles northwest of
downtown Los Angeles is predomi
nantly white and the jury was made
up of 10 whites a Hispanic and an
Asian.
The location and makeup of the jury
which returned not-guilty verdicts
on three of the officers and declared
itself hung on one count against the
copwho struck the most blows fu
eled suspicions of racism.
The verdict was broadcast live
shortly after 3 p.m. Wednesday and
although some commentators pre
dicted one or two officers’might be
acquitted seemingly everyone
was
caught by surprise when the words
“not guilty” were spoken 10 times
mistrial once and the jurors filed out
without returning a single conviction.
Today this jury told the world
what we all saw with our own eyes
wasn’t a crime Bradley said on tele
vision and radio shortly after the ver
dict
“Today that jury asked us to accept
the senseless and brutal beating
of a
helpless
man
Within minutes after the verdict
angry crowds gathered at the intersec
tion of 55th Street and Normandie
Avenue in the center of the South-
Central neighborhood. Someone set
up a cardboard sign that read “Black
men and women are fair game for
shooting and beating at the hands of
Gates’ gang known as.LAPD.
At the same time acrowd of about
200 gathered at the Lake View Ter-
race spot where King had beenbeaten
They chanted “We want justice” and
“Guilty. Passing police cars were
stoned.
Mainstream outrage over the ver
dict flooded television news reports
with statements from the NAACP the
American Civil Liberties Union the
American Jewish Congress and o
th
ers.
Crowds gathered downtown around
police headquarters by 5 p.m. and as
Gatesl eft to attend a political meet
ing he was greeted with chants of
“LAPD are rednecks. LAPD are rac
ists.
Asduskfell violence explodedback
on Normandie. Police arrivingto ar
rest looters at 71st nd -Normafidie
were showeredwith’rocksandbottlesj’
as the crowd got out of control. Wit
nesses said that after about 15 min
utes a sergeant got on a loudspeaker
and ordered a police retreat i
Television news displayed live
pictures of people smashing shop
windows andcartingoff goodsWhite
motorists were pulled out of
cars
and a white truck driver was beaten
nearly to death by a mob a beating
broadcast live from a television heli
copter. As night fell fires broke out
in the Central district -v.
At about the same time gunshots
were heard at Lake View Terrace It
quickly became clear that this was
different from the 11965 riots in Watts
which came to symbolize the black-
white tension that has ripped the
country apart for so long.
This time Los Angeles was a
dif
ferent city with a more subtle spec
trum. While the haves are still pre
dominantly white the “have
and the emerging “up by the boot
straps” class are now a mix ofblacks
Hispanic-Americans and undocu
mented Mexican and Central’Ameri-
cans and a large number of Asians
with Koreans bumping hard against
the other groups.
Anger with the authorities appar
ently had been bubbling for decades
and it was not just blacks who took
the King verdict personally it was
also Hispanics and whites There is
much evidence that the first moments
of rage sucked in many opportunists
with a need to vent frustration or
simply steal and pillage.
Some Koreans who come from a
nation where police are traditionally
heavy-handed did not seem ‘to un
derstand the outrage over the verdict
However they quickly grew dis
gusted with police for failing to pro
tect them.
It appears the firstfatality occurred
at 8:15 pjn Wednesday when
year-old Louis Watson was shot
the head by unknown gunmen rat
Vernon and Vermont Avenues.
About this time Gates had put the
police on alert canceled leaves and
called back hundreds of investiga
tors But Bradley decided Gates had
lost control of the city and at about9
pin he declared a state of emer
gency and persuaded Wilson to call
out the National Guard
But the violence continued to grow
Shortly after 11 pin the first dea i-
for which the police took respond
bilitY occurred when a year
man waskilled in a shootfiut’be
.tweemuniforme’d tJffie&siand fct&Ui
project
The pattern in the South
area was set early S tores were looted
of most.of their goods and when
there’seemed little of value’left
someone poured gasoline on the floor
and set it afire On the first night 150
fires were set
Normal rivalries among street
gangs were suspended and the C
rips
Bloods Hoovers and Eight Trey
Gangsters joined in a rampage of
looting burning and shootingat po
lice officers.
The violence spread throughout
the day Thursday as radio commen
tators compared the view to the Iraqi
occupationof Kuwait City last year
with plumes of smoke marking the
distance to the horizon.
“For a period of time from mid
night to three o’clock we were get
ting about three new fires aminute
said Fire Chief Donald Manning.
“We had numerous situations
where there were attempts to kill
firefighters added explaining
why fire officials were letting some
blazes burn unattended.
The violence spread at 2 p.m.
Thursday to the city of Compton
where police said a man was shot
after he swung a bottle at an officer
Mobs took to the streets in Long
Beach Inglewood the normally staid
shopping and banking district of Mid-
Wilshire and even Hollywood Bou
levard
At5p.m. a 15-year-old blackmale
was killed by sheriffsdeputiesin
Hawthorne allegedly after looting a
jewelry store’and firing at cops.
By mid-afternoon Gates admitted
that his force was unprepared and
outmanned.
“We were simply overwhelmed
he told a news conference.having”
swapped his business suit for a po
lice uniform with apistol on his hip.
The National Guard did not pro
vide help as quickly as had been
hoped.
Although the first 2000 troops
arrived in the city by midday Thurs
day they were mostly without am
munition due to a delivery foulThursday afternoon the violence
also spread from South-Central into
neighboring Koreatown where most
of the residents are black or His
panic and most of the shopkeepers
are among the more than 300,000
Koreans’who have arrived in the
city in the last 15 years.
Koreatownis a volatile area with
greatsuspicioriifnothatred’among
the three groups. Many blame the
tensions on cultural differences.
The Korean language cap sound
rude to English speakers and that
perception combined with the lack
of black employees in shops run by
Asian families has fed tension.
Koreanmerchantssaidthey called
for protection quickly but the pleas
were ignored by police who said
they were quickly overwhelmed by
the crisis
The Koreans quickly armed
themselves and a security guard
was killed Thursday evening in a
shootout between shopkeepers and
a black mob More than 100 struc
ture fires were reported in
Koreatown
Theonlybuildingssparedseemed
to be ones protected armed Ko
reins or some that were identified
by graffiti as black or”Latino
By Thursday afternoon the local
television airwaves were filled with
live reports from the ground and
helicopter.
Traffic reporters who usually
coveredfreeway conditions counted
blazes and reporters interviewed
brazen looters carrying out televi
sion sets food liquor and diapers.
“IfI don’t take ithome it will just
get burned up a man in his 20s
said before dashing down the street
with a television.
The dusk curfew seemed to take
the edge off. Police andguardsmen
started tomake their presence felt
again at first as escorts for
firefighters then fanning.out to
minimize looting
By the end of Thursday night the
death toll stood at 25 with 572 inju
ries more than 1000 fires and 720
arrests.
Dawn broke Friday through an
eerie yellow haze from the fires
Nearly every factory office school
park and beach was closed.
People ventured out in the most
heavily affected areas to assess the
damage many 16 see police patrols
for the firstfime in30 hours.
The violence had spread tQ Long
Beach south Los Angelesi1′.where
vandals fire to theregionalDepart-
ment of Motor Vehicles building
which burned most of the day
it was one of 218 fires there Friday
A curfew was declaredand 340 people
were arrested.
President Bush ordered 1000 fed
erallaw officials fromcustoms immigration and other services Ja Los Angeles He later dis
patched 1,500 marines’and 3,000
Army troops to act as backups for the
National Guard. He took the further
step of federalizing the Guard putting
them under of Gen. ColinPowell chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff rather than local officials
Theviolencebecariiemorespd
radic
Friday. Police started to make whole
sale arrests more thanS.OOOonFriday
alone mostly for looting.
There was a missive enforcement
presence with 20,960 cops and troops
ready for action For most of Friday it
was almost 6000 at any given time
including 1,800 Los Angeles police
officers 700 California Highway Pa
trol officers and 2,800inembers of the
National Guard.
At 7:30 a.m. Friday three Los An
geles police officers were wounded
by a sniper in South’In the early afternoon Rodney King
gave a statement broadcast on radio
and television a move requested by
political leaders to calm tensions
Wevegot to quit we’ve got to
quit he said in a halting emotional
tone.
“I could understandthe first upset
for the first two hours after the verdict.
But to go on to keep going on like this
its just not right
By Friday evening convoys of fed
eral troops had arrived on the outskirts
of town r
Saturday morning television pro
graming was back to normal power
lines were being repaired limited bus
service was restored and the commu
nity breathed a collective sigh ofrelief
that Friday night had been quiet
usi:1e ses i nj
InCahf
pro longed
Fridaynight-as
of a
3. 1991. Los
to alocal
Even Police
.N .vember
iL elf
been beaten
Je ish
ft
exploded back
and
were showeredwith’rocks.and battles
g i
and carting offgop
c Js
was
broJ
Soti -Central’dist.rict.
.J pped
“haves”.are pre
ofbla’ckS
ag inst
a th rities appar-
s.
t ok
‘Th re
ftrstmoments
opportu 1 sts
st al
police’are
not’seem’to’tn-
apPears
‘gunrneniat
me
c
tors
andatabo t.9-
persuadedrWilson l’
r
ShortlyafterH Jin..t1iefKs
r.espon i”
38′ ear oI
W l
d’ s nd ‘Ci\ I
ians in ,8 outl “GentraI th Uing
l
s Stores
most of
there seemed
ured on
\vere s t.
rips
‘a ram age
sho ting
as
f
were
he
vio ence 2′
c ty
At5 pan black male
sheriffs deputies in
store and
overwhe ed
conference having
Koreans who h ve
i
Koreatownisavolaiilear a
greatsuspiciori ifnotha1edamong’
laI guage cap’sound
d
Korean merchants said they
p’l as
cris s.
th
shopkee ers
bl ckmob IOO
struc-
‘in
The only buildings spared seemed
re3 S w r ide tiij d
as’
10 aI
covered freeway
car ‘ying out”t levi
f lt
fir fighters fanning out
looti 1g
.BytheendofThursdaynight
fir s
through.an
t sic p trols
first tUne in 30
h
Angelesi where
vand is set the regionl Depart
was of718 theieFJiday
d cl red d ople
to Ang l s. lat r
marines and
under command
radic
salearrests-mor
m ssive
with20,960
tion FnnostofFr day
was
California’Highway
n-
gel s poli e were
al
R ney
dio
request l
1 underst nd’
Kst
era
oftown
m r ng
F day q et
Harvey
Saturday
-as
ter-
sur-
povertydrugaddiction
Angelespolicestopped
longest
fu-
officers might
man
spotwhereKinghadbeenbeaten
Asduskfellviolenceexplodedback
shov ‘
cars
out
Sodlh-Central’district.
dif
o f
muchevidencethatthefi
dis-
Itappearsthe
at
hadputthe
lostcontrol
Buttheviolencecontinuedtogrow
p.in.’tliefirstdeatti”
tlte.pohce
killed li
ffioers i51 i
iansin is Sauth tentralhousings
value left
andst titafire.Onthefirstnight,150
firesvvere set
po-
firefighters
Beachjnglewood
arrivi ed
r
avolatile
ifnothatred among
c
struc-
bu i dings
it
as
with572ipju-
Nearlyeveryfactoryoffice
;
r
ser
dis-
salearrests-morethan3,000onFriday
presencewith20,960cops
‘Intheearly
after
nitybreathedacollective
.
, .
–
.
. ”
–
,
–
.
– –
–
,
–
,
¬
.
,
–
: – ¬
;
,
;
, ;
,
.
,
, ,
.
:
: . . , ,
– –
–
.
,
. ,
, –
¬
$ .
.
,
, ¬
,
” . ”
¬
.
, ,
–
,
–
.
.
.
, –
.
¬
.
.
,
, ¬
,
,
.
– –
– ¬
.
. .
,
¬
‘
,
” ” ,
,
.
,
‘ , ‘ ‘ ¬
–
.
”
. ”
,
¬
, –
.
, ”
‘ . . ”
, –
–
. .
,
” ”
” .”
.
” –
,
,
,
¬
.
. . ,
–
,
”
. –
. ”
,
. . –
, –
– ‘
.
–
–
,
. ; > –
‘
,
‘ ,
.
‘ ‘ ,
,
–
. , ‘;
‘ – . ‘
. ;- .
,
.
,
–
. ,
.
¬
, –
. ” ” ¬
, ” – ”
” –
” ,
– ¬
‘ –
,
.
–
, –
,
:
.
” ‘- .
,
– , ‘ ¬
.
, ¬
¬
.
: . , – –
– -‘
.
,
,
–
.
, :
. – –
‘ ‘ :
. ‘ ‘ &
‘
.
. . –
.
”
–
– – –
;
‘
, ‘ *
. ‘ & & –
.
–
:
. ,’ ‘ ,
. ,
.
‘
‘ ”
, ,
,
.
, ¬
.
¬
,
.
”
. . –
‘ –
,’ ‘
.
”
,” ‘ ,
.
. . .
,
:
, ,
–
¬
.
. . – –
‘ ‘ ‘
.
,
‘
.
;
–
.
” ,”
, .
”
–
, .
–
.
‘
,
¬
, –
, – .
–
,
–
,
‘
.
. .
‘ % :
, ,
,
:
,
‘
:
.
.
;,
–
,
, .
,
,
,
.
.
,
. –
”
.
– – ;
,
‘ ” – ” –
” – . ” ‘ ‘
,
”
.
.
,
–
, , .
” ‘ ,
;”
, .
.
: .
, ” ‘
,
.
.
,
–
, ,
:
.
.
‘
,
, ,
.
, ,
– . -;
.
‘
;-
:
.
”
.
‘
,
. . –
‘
.
” –
,
\ . . , , ,
‘
: < . .
;
.
, –
– ,
, ¬
, . ¬
, ‘ ,
.
,
– .
, .
, .
‘
. –
– ,
, .
–
, ,
.
, ,
,
, ¬
,
.
: . . , – –
– .
” – ‘ ,
,
*
. .
. . . . ” ‘ ‘. ”
, ‘
,
” ,
.
?
.
” ” ;
” ,
.
‘
,
. . . ‘ . ”
–
. . .
, –
,
,
¬
.
,
.
,
{ !: .
,
:
,
(
, .
‘
.
;
. .
.
.
.
.
.’ . .
.
,
.
<;
‘
‘
”
.
”
.
– ,
.
}
.
.. : . :
.
‘
:
:
‘
.
.
. \
‘
;
”
.
‘
‘
‘
‘
:
. , :
‘
‘ ‘
,
,
–
.
; ‘
‘
:
.
. –
:
‘
‘
‘ . . ! .
?
. :-
.
” , ”
.
‘; . ”
: ‘ ‘.;
‘ ,*, ‘ \; :
. ; , ! : , ” , $ !
‘
.
‘
.
\
”
‘
‘
.
‘
:
)
‘
:
. ‘
”
‘ ”
. .
‘
.
.
.’
:
.
‘.’
.
.
‘
. .
.
.
.
‘
. .
.
‘ :
.
‘ . . ‘
.
, , .
! ;
,
‘
‘ )
{‘
‘
‘
.
‘
.
.
:
.
.
; ‘
. ‘
.
‘
.
.
:
.
‘ :. .
‘
: .
, : .
. . .
.
. .
.
.
‘
‘
‘
.
,
‘
”
‘
.
‘
.
”
‘
;
.
‘
–
.
$
,
‘ ::
.
‘ ‘
: ,
:
‘
.
”
.
: , .
. .
,
‘
:
‘ . . ‘ .
‘
‘
-”
.
.
:
‘ ‘ ‘
.
. ,
(
:
: ‘
. .
‘,’ ‘
[ .
;
‘
. : . ‘ ,
.
.
!
: . . ( . . ,
‘
.
:
, ” . . . , . ‘ . , . ,
.
..
–
–
,
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
”
–
–
–
.
–
–
‘
–
–
‘ ‘
–
:
‘
.
=
& ° ‘
°
;
: .
‘
–
–
.
”
;
:
–
,
–
‘
&
,
]
=
–
+
.
‘
= ;
;
‘
, ‘
–
,
‘
–
–
” ”
–
.
,
:
–
: ”
;
–
2. Old and New Identities,
Old and New Ethnicities
STUART HALL
IN MY PREVIOUS TALK, I TRIED TO OPEN OUT THE QUESTIONS
about the local and the global from their somewhat closed, somewhat
over-integrated, and somewhat over-systematized formulations. My
argument was that we need to think about the processes which are
now revealing themselves in terms of the local and the global, in
those two spaces, but we also need to think of these as more contra-
dictory formulations than we usually do. Unless we do, I was con-
cerned that we are likely to be disabled in trying to think those ideas
politically.
I was therefore attempting – certainly not to close out the ques-
tions of power and the questions of appropriation which I think are
lodged at the very center of any notion of a shift between the dis-
positions of the local and the global in the emergence of a cultural
politics on a world scale – but rather to conceptualize that within a
more open-ended and contingent cultural politics.
At the end of the’ talk, however, I was obliged to ask if there is a
politics, indeed, a counter-politics of the local. If there are new
globals and new locals at work, who are the new subjects of this poli-
tics of position? What conceivable identities could they appear in? Can
identity itself be re-thought and re-lived, in and through difference?
It is this question which is what I want to address here. I have
called it “Old and New Identities, Old and New Ethnicities” and
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
what I am going to do first is to return to the question of identity
and try to look at some of the ways in which we are beginning to re-
conceptualize that within contemporary theoretical discourses. I shall
then go back from that theoretical consideration to the ground of a
cultural politics. Theory is always a detour on the way to something
more important.
I return to the question of identity because the question of identity
has returned to us; at any rate, it has returned to us in British politics
and British cultural politics today. It has not returned in the same old
place; it is not the traditional conception of identity. It is not going
back to the old identity politics of the 1960s social movements. But it
is, nevertheless, a kind of return to some of the ground which we
used to think in that way. I will make a comment at the very end
about what is the nature of this theoretical-political work which
seems to lose things on the one side and then recover them in a dif-
ferent way from another side, and then have to think them out all
over again just as soon as they get rid of them. What is this never-
ending theoretical work which is constantly losing and regaining
concepts? I talk about identity here as a point at which, on the one
hand, a whole set of new theoretical discourses intersect and where,
on the other, a whole new set of cultural practices emerge. I want to
begin by trying, very briefly, to map some of those points of inter-
section theoretically, and then to look at some of their political conse-
quences.
The old logics of identity are ones with which we are extremely
familiar, either philosophically, or psychologically. Philosophically,
the old logic of identity which many people have critiqued in the
form of the old Cartesian subject was often thought in terms of the
origin of being itself, the ground of action. Identity is the ground of
action. And we have in more recent times a psychological discourse
of the self which is very similar: a notion of the continuous, self-
sufficient, developmental, unfolding, inner dialectic of selfhood. We
are never quite there, but always on our way to it, and when we get
there, we will at last know exactly who it is we are.
Now this logic of identity is very important in a whole range of
political, theoretical and conceptual discourses. I am interested in it
also as a kind of existential reality because I think the logic of the
language of identity is extremely important to our own self-con-
ceptions. It contains the notion of the true self, some real self inside
there, hiding inside the husks of all the false selves that we present
42
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
to the rest of the world. It is a kind of guarantee of authenticity. Not
until we get really inside and hear what the true self has to say do
we know what we are “really saying
.”
There is something guaranteed about that logic or discourse of
identity. It gives us a sense of depth, out there, and in here. It is spa-
tially organized. Much of our discourse of the inside and the outside,
of the self and other, of the individual and society, of the subject and
the object, are grounded in that particular logic of identity. And it
helps us, I would say, to sleep well at night.
Increasingly, I think one of the main functions of concepts is that
they give us a good night’s rest. Because what they tell us is that
there is a kind of stable, only very slowly-changing ground inside the
hectic upsets, discontinuities and ruptures of history. Around us his-
tory is constantly breaking in unpredictable ways but we, somehow,
go on being the same.
That logic of identity is, for good or ill, finished. It’s at an end for
a whole range of reasons. It’s at an end in the first instance because
of some of the great de-centerings of modern thought. One could dis-
cuss this very elaborately I could spend the rest of the time talking
about it but I just want to slot the ideas into place very quickly by
using some names as reference points.
It is not possible to hold to that logic of identity after Marx because
although Marx does talk about man (he doesn’t talk about women
making history but perhaps they were slotted in, as the nineteenth
century so often slotted women in under some other masculine title),
about men and women making history but under conditions which
are not of their own choosing. And having lodged either the in-
dividual or collective subject always within historical practices, we as
individuals or as groups cannot be, and can never have been, the sole
origin or authors of those practices. That is a profound historical de-
centering in terms of social practice.
If that was not strong enough, knocking us sideways as it were,
Freud came knocking from underneath, like Hamlet’s ghost, and
said, “While you’re being decentered from left to right like that, let
me .decenter you from below a bit, and remind you that this stable
language of identity is also set from the psychic life about which you
don’t know very much, and can’t know very much. And which you
can’t know very much by simply taking thought about it: the great
continent of the unconscious which speaks most clearly when it’s
slipping rather than when it’s saying what it means.” This makes the
43
“%0•.\.,*,
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
self begin to seem a pretty fragile thing.
Now, buffeted on one side by Marx and upset from below by
Freud, just as it opens its mouth ‘to say, “Well, at least I speak so
therefore I must be something,” Saussure and linguistics comes along
and says “That’s not true either, you know. Language was there
before you. You can only say something by positioning yourself in
the discourse. The tale tells the teller, the myth tells the myth-maker,
etc. The enunciation is always from some subject who is positioned
by and in discourse.” That upsets that. Philosophically, one comes to
the end of any kind of notion of a perfect transparent continuity
between our language and something out there which can be called
the real, or the truth, without any quotation marks.
These various upsets, these disturbances in the continuity of the
notion of the subject, and the stability of identity, are indeed, what
modernity is like. It is not, incidentally, modernity itself. That has an
older, and longer history. But this is the beginning of modernity as
trouble. Not modernity as enlightenment and progress, but moderni-
ty as a problem.
It is also upset by other enormous historical transformations which
do not have, and cannot be given, a single name, but without which
the story could not be told. In addition to the three or four that
I
have quoted, we could mention the relativisation of the Western
narrative itself, the Western episteme, by the rise of other cultures to
prominence, and fifthly, the displacement of the masculine gaze.
Now, the question of trying to come to terms with the notion of
identity in the wake of those theoretical decenterings is an extremely
problematic enterprise. But that is not all that has been disturbing the
settled logic of identity. Because as I was saying earlier when I was
talking about the relative decline, or erosion, the instability of the
nation-state, of the self-sufficiency of national economies and conse-
quently, of national identities as points of reference, there has simul-
taneously been a fragmentation and erosion of collective social iden-
tity.
I mean here the great collective social identities which we thought
of as large-scale, all-encompassing, homogenous, as unified collective
identities, which could be spoken about almost as if they were sin-
gular actors in their own right but which, indeed, placed, positioned,
stabilized, and allowed us to understand and read, almost as a code,
the imperatives of the individual self: the great collective social iden-
tities of class, of race, of nation, of gender, and of the West.
44
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES .
These collective social identities were formed in, and stabilized by,
the huge, long-range historical processes which have produced the
modern world, just as the theories and conceptualizations that I just
referred to very briefly are what constituted modernity as a form of
self-reflection. They were staged and stabilized by industrialization,
by capitalism, by urbanization, by the formation of the world market,
by the social and the sexual division of labor, by the great punctu-
ation of civil and social life into the public and the private; by the
dominance of the nation state, and by the identification between
Westernization and the notion of modernity itself.
I spoke in my previous talk about the importance, to any sense of
where we are placed in the world, of the national economy, the
nation-state and of national cultural identities. Let me say a word
here about the great class identities which have stabilized so much of
our understanding of the immediate and not-so-immediate past.
Class was the main locator of social position, that which organized
our understanding of the main grid and group relations between
social groups. They linked us to material life through the economy
itself. They provided the code through which we read one another.
They provided the codes through which we understood each others’
languages. They provided, of course, the notions of collective action
itself, that which would unlock politics. Now as I tried to say pre-
viously, the great collective social identities rise and fall and it is
almost as difficult to know whether they are more dangerous when
they are falling than when they are rising.
These great collective social identities have not disappeared. Their
purchase and efficacy in the real world that we all occupy is ever
present. But the fact is that none of them is, any longer, in either the
social, historical or epistemological place where they were in our con-
ceptualizations of the world in the recent past. They cannot any
longer be thought in the same homogenous form. We are as attentive
to their inner differences, their inner contradictions, their segmenta-
tions and their fragmentations as we are to their already-completed
homogeneity, their unity and so on.
They are not already-produced stabilities and totalities in the
world. They do not operate like totalities. If they have a relationship
to our identities, cultural and individual, they do not any longer have
that suturing, structuring, or stabilizing force, so that we can know
what we are simply by adding up the sum of our positions inrela-
tion to them. They do not give us the code of identity as I think they
45
it. WMKQ%i ‘”‘
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
did in the past.
It is a moot point by anybody who takes this argument directly on
the pulses, as to whether they ever functioned in that way. Perhaps
they never functioned in that way. This may be, indeed, what the
narrative of the West is like: the notion that we told of the story we
told ourselves, about their functioning in that way. We know that the
great homogenous tunction of the collective social class is extremely
difficult for any good historian to actually lay his or her finger on. It
keeps disappearing just over the horizon, like the organic commu-
nity.
You know the story about the organic community? The organic
community was just always in the childhood you have left behind.
Raymond Williams has a wonderful essay on these people, a range
of social critics who say you can measure the present in relation to
the past, and you know the past because back then it was much
more organic and integrated. When was “back then”? Well, when I
was a child, there was always some adult saying, “When I was a
child, it was much more integrated.” And so, eventually, some of
these great collectivities are rather like those people who have an
activity of historical nostalgia going on in their retrospective recon-
structions. We always reconstructed them more essentially, more
homogenously, more unified, less con.tradictorily than they ever
were, once you actually know anything about them.
That is one argument. Whatever the past was like, they may have
all marched forth, unified and dictating history forward, for many
decades in the past. They sure aren’t doing it now.
Now as I have said, the question of how to begin to think ques-
tions of identity, either social or individual, not in the wake of their
disappearance but in the wake of their erosion, of their fading, of
their not having the kind of purchase and comprehensive explan-
atory power they had before, that is what it seems to me has gone.
They used to be thought of – and it is a wonderfully gendered
definition – as “master concepts,” the “master concepts” of class.
It is not tolerable any longer to have a “master concept” like that.
Once it loses its “master” status its explanatory reach weakens,
becomes more problematic. We can think of some things in relation
to questions of class, though always recognizing its real historical
complexity. Yet there are certain other things it simply will not, or
cannot, decipher or explain. And this brings us face to face with the
increasing social diversity and plurality, the technologies of the self
46
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
which characterize the modern world in which we live.
Well, we might say, where does this leave any discourse on social
identity at all? Haven’t I now abolished it from about as many sides
as I could think of? As has been true in theoretical work over the last
twenty years, the moment a concept disappears through the left hand
door, it returns through the right hand window, but not in quite the
same place. There is a wonderful moment in Althusser’s text where
he says “1 can now abolish the notion of ideas.” And he actually
writes the word “ideas” and draws a line through it to convince him-
self we need never use the word again.
In exactly the same way, the old discourse of the subject was
abolished, put in a deep container, concrete poured over it, with a
half-life of a million years. We will never look at it again, when,
bloody hell, in about five minutes, we are talking about subjectivity,
and the subject in discourse, and it has come roaring back in. So it is
not, I think, surprising that, having lost one sense of identity, we find
we need it. Where are we to find it?
One of the places that we have to go to is certainly in the con-
temporary languages which have rediscovered but repositioned the
notion of the subject, of subjectivity. That is, principally, and pre-
eminently, the languages of feminism and of psychoanalysis.
I do not want to go through that argument but I want to say some-
thing about how one might begin to think questions of identity from
this new set of theoretical spaces. And I have to do this program-
matically. I have to state what I think, from this position, identity is
and is not as a sort of protocol, although each one could take me a
very long time.
n makes us aware that identities are never completed, never fin-
ished; that they are always as subjectivity itself is, in process. That
itself is a pretty difficult task. Though we have always known it a
little bit, we have always thought about ourselves as getting more
like ourselves everyday. But that is a sort of Hegelian notion, of going
forward to meet that which we always were. I want to open that
process up considerably. Identity is always in the process of formation.
Secondly, identity means, or connotes, the process of identification,
of saying that this here is the same as that, or we are the same
together, in this respect. But something we have learnt from the
whole discussion of identification, in feminism and psychoanalysis,
is the degree to which that structure of identification is always con-
structed through ambivalence. Always constructed through splitting.
47
I
CUL TURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
Splitting between that which one is, and that which is the other. The
attempt to expel the other to the other side of the universe is always
compounded by the relationships of love and desire. This is a dif-
ferent language from the language of, as it were, the Others who are
completely different from oneself.
This is the Other that belongs inside one. This is the Other that one
can only know from the place from which one stands. This is the self
as it is inscribed in the gaze of the Other. And this notion which
breaks down the boundaries, between outside and inside, between
those who belong and those who do not, between those whose his-
tories have been written and those whose histories they have de-
pended on but whose histories cannot be spoken. That the unspoken
silence in between that which can be spoken is the only way to reach
for the whole history. There is no other history except to take the
absences and the silences along with what can be spoken. Everything
that can be spoken is on the ground of the enormous voices that have
not, or cannot yet be heard.
. This doubleness of discourse, this necessity of the Other to the self,
this inscription of identity in the look of the other finds its artic-
ulation profoundly in the ranges of a given text. And I want to cite
one which I am sure you know but won’t remember necessarily,
though it is a wonderful, majestic moment in Fanon’s Black Skin,
White Masks, when he describes himself as a young Antillean, face to
face with the white Parisian child and her mother. And the child
pulls the hand of the mother and says, “Look, Mama, a black man.”
And he said, “For the first time, I knew who I was. For the first time,
I felt as if I had been simultaneously exploded in the gaze, in the vio-
lent gaze of the other, and at the same time, recomposed as another.”
The notion that identity in that sense could be told as two histories,
one over here, one over there, never having spoken to one another,
never having anything to do with one another, when translated from
the psychoanalytic to the historical terrain, is simply not tenable any
longer in an increasingly globalized world. It is just not tenable any
longer.
People like me who came to England in the 1950s have been there
for centuries; symbolically, we have been there for centuries. I was
coming home. I am the sugar at the bottom of the English cup of tea.
I am the sweet tooth, the sugar plantations that rotted generations of
English children’s teeth. There are thousands of others beside me that
are, you know, the cup of tea itself. Because they don’t grow it in
48
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
Lancashire, you know. Not a single tea plantation exists within the
United Kingdom. This is the symbolization of English identity –
mean, what does anybody in the world know about an English
person except that they can’t get through the day without a cup of
tea?
Where does it come from? Ceylon – Sri Lanka, India. That is the
outside history that is inside the history of the English. There is no
English history without that other history. The notion that identity
has to do with people that look the same, feel the same, call them-
selves the same, is nonsense. As a process, as a narrative, as a dis-
course, it is always told from the position of the Other.
What is more is that identity is always in part a narrative, always
in part a kind of representation. It is always within representation.
Identity is not something which is formed outside and then we tell
stories about it. It is that which is narrated in one’s own self. I will
say something about that in terms of my own narration of identity in
a moment – you know, that wonderful moment where Richard II
says, “Come let us sit down and tell stories about the death of
kings.” Well, I am going to tell you a story and ask you to tell one
about yourself.
We have the notion of identity as contradictory, as composed of
more than one discourse, as composed always across the silences of
the other, as written in and through ambivalence and desire. These
are extremely important ways of trying to think an identity which is
not a sealed or closed totality.
Now we have within theory some interesting ways of trying to
think difference in this way. We have learnt quite a lot about sexual
difference in feminist writers. And we have learnt a lot about ques-
tions of difference from people like Derrida. I do think that there are
some important ways in which Derrida’s use of the notion of the dif-
ference between”difference” and II differance,” spelt with an 11 a,” is
significant. The “a,” the anomolous “a” in Derrida’s spelling of dif-
ferance, which he uses as a kind of marker that sets up a disturbance
in our settled understanding of translation of our concept of dif-
ference is very important, because that little IIa,” disturbing as it is,
which you can hardly hear when spoken, sets the word in motion to
new meanings yet without obscuring the trace of its other meanings
in its past.
His sense of II differance/’ as one writer has put it, remains sus-
pended between the two French verbs lito differ” and lito defer,”
49
..
CUL TURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
both of which contribute to its textual force, neither of which can
fully capture its meaning. Language depends on difference, as 5aus-
sure has shown: the structure of distinctive propositions which make
up its economy. But where Derrida breaks new ground is in the
extent to which”differ” shades into”defer.”
Now this notion of a differance is not simply a set of binary,
reversible oppositions; thinking sexual difference not simply in terms
of the fixed opposition of male and female, but of all those anomol-
ous sliding positions ever in process, in between which opens up the
continent of sexuality to increasing points of disturbance. That is
what the odyssey of difference now means in the sense in which I am
trying to use it.
That is about difference, and you might ask the question, where
does identity come in to this infinite postponement of meaning that
is lodged in notion of the trace of something which still
retains its roots in one meaning while it is, as it were, moving to
another, encapsulating another, with endless shiftings, slidings, of
that signifier?
The truth is that Derrida does not help us as much as he might
here in thinking about the relationship between identity and differ-
ence. And the appropriators of Derrida in America, especially in
American philosophical and literary thought, help us even less. By
taking Derrida’s notion of differance, precisely right out of the
tension between the two textual connotations, “defer” and” differ,”
and lodging it only in the endless play of difference, Derrida’s
politics is in that very moment uncoupled.
From that moment unrolls that enormous proliferation of extreme-
ly sophisticated, playful deconstruction which is a kind of endless
academic game. Anybody can do it, and on and on it rolls. No
signifier ever stops; no-one is ever responsible for any meaning; all
traces are effaced. The moment anything is lodged, it is immediately
erased. Everybody has a great time; they go to conferences and do it,
as it were. The very notion of the politics which requires the holding
of the tension between that which is both placed and not stitched in
place, by the word which is always in motion between positions,
which requires us to think both positionality and movement, both
together, not one and the other, not playing with difference, or
“finding nights to rest under” identity, but living in the tension of
identity and difference, is uncoupled.
We have then to go on thinking beyond that mere playfulness into
50
“”‘!l=__!!!,as””,;,””‘T
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
the really hard game which the play of difference actually means to
us historically. For if signification depends upon the endless reposi-
tioning of its differential terms, meaning in any specific instance
depends on the contingent and arbitrary stop, the necessary break. It
is a very simple point.
Language is part of an infinite semiosis of meaning. To say any-
thing, I have got to shut up. I have to construct a single sentence. I
know that the next sentence will open the infinite semiosis of mean-
ing again, so I will take it back. 50 each stop is not a natural break.
It does not say, “I’in about to end a sentence and that will be the
truth.” It understands that it is contingent. It is a positioning. It is the
cut of ideology which, across the semiosis of language, constitutes
meaning. But you have to get into that game or you will never say
anything at all.
You think I’m joking. I know graduate students of mine who got
into this theoretical fix in the seventies, one enormous French theore-
tician after another, throwing them aside, until they could not commit
a single word to paper at all because to say anything was to open
oneself to the endless sliding of the signifier. So if they said, what I
think Derrida really, in – really – ooh – start again, yes, start again.
Meaning is in that sense a wager. You take a bet. Not a bet on
truth, but a bet on saying something. You have to be positioned
somewhere in order to speak. Even if you are positioned in order to
unposition yourself, even if you want to take it back, you have to
come into language to get out of it. There is no other way. That is the
paradox of meaning.
To think it only in terms of difference and not in terms of the
relational position between the suturing, the arbitrary, overdeter-
mined cut of language which says something which is instantly
opened again to the play of meaning; not to think of meaning al-
ways, in supplement, that there is always something left over, always
something which goes on escaping the precision; the attempt of
language to code, to make precise, to fix, to halt, etc.; not to think it
in that way is to lose hold of the two necessary ends of the chain to
which the new notion of identity has to be conceptualized.
Now I can turn to questions of politics. In this conception of an
identity which has to be thought through difference, is there a gener-
al politics of the local to bring to bear against the great, over-riding,
powerful, technologically-based, massively-invested unrolling of
global processes which I was trying to describe in my previous talk
51
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
which tend to mop up all differences, and occlude those differences?
Which means, as it were, they are different -but it doesn’t make
any difference that they are duferent, they’re just different.
No, there is no general politics. I have nothing in the kitbag. There
is nothing I can pull out. But I have a little local politics to tell you
about. It may be that all we have, in bringing the politics of the local
to bear against the global, is a lot of little local politics. I do not know
if that is true or not. But I would like to spend some time later talk-
ing about the cultural politics of the local, and of this new notion of
identity. For it is in this new.frame that identity has come back into
cultural politics in Britain. The formation of the Black diasporas in
the period of post-war migration in the fifties and sixties has trans-
formed English social, economic and political life.
In the first generations, the majority of people had the same illu-
sion that I did: that I was about to go back home. That may have
been because everybody always asked me: when was I going back
home? We did think that we were just going to get back on the boat;
we were here for a temporary sojourn. By the seventies, it was per-
fectly clear that we were not there for a temporary sojourn. Some
people were going to stay and then the politics of racism really
emerged.
Now one of the main reactions against the politics of racism in
Britain was what I would call IIIdentity Politics One,” the first form
of identity politics. It had to do with the constitution of some defen-
sive collective identity against the practices of racist society. It had to
do with the fact that people were being blocked out of and refused
an identity and identification within the majority nation, having to
find some other roots on which to stand. Because people have to find
some ground, some place, some position on which to stand. Blocked
out of any access to an English or British identity, people had to try
to discover who they were. This is the moment I defined in my pre-
vious talk. It is the crucial moment of the rediscovery or the search
for roots.
In the course of the search for roots, one discovered not only
where one came £rom, one began to speak the language of that which
is home in the genuine sense, that other crucial moment which is the
recovery of lost histories. The histories that have never been told
about ourselves that we could not learn’in schools, that were not in
any books, and that we had to recover.
This is an enormous act of what I want to call imaginary political
52
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
re-identification, re-territorialization and re-identification, without
which a counter-politics could not have been constructed. I do not
know an example of any group or category of the people of the
margins, of the locals, who have been able to mobilize themselves,
socially, culturally, economically, politically in the last twenty or
twenty-five years who have not gone through some such series of
moments in order to resist their exclusion, their marginalization. That
is how and where the margins begin to speak. The margins begin to
contest, the locals begin to come to representation.
The identity which that whole, enormouS political space produced
in Britain, as it did elsewhere, was the category Black. I want to say
something about this category which we all now 50 take for granted.
I will tell you some stories about it.
I was brought up in a lower middle class family in Jamaica. I left
there in the early fifties to go and study in England. Until I left,
though I suppose 98 per cent of the Jamaican population is either
Black or colored in one way or another, I had never ever heard any-
body either call themselves, or refer to anybody else as “Black.”
Never. I heard a thousand other words. My grandmother could dif-
ferentiate about fifteen different shades between light brown and
dark brown. When I left Jamaica, there was a beauty contest in which
the different shades of women were graded according to different
trees, so that there was Miss Mahogany, Miss Walnut, etc.
People think of Jamaica as a simple society. In fact, it had the most
complicated color stratification system in the world. Talk about prac-
tical semioticiansi anybody in my family could compute and calculate
anybody’s social status by grading the particular quality of their hair
versus the particular quality of the family they came from and which
street they lived in, including physiognomy, shading, etc. You could
trade off one characteristic against another. Compared with that, the
normal class stratification system is absolute child’s play.
But the word “Black” was never uttered. Why? No Black people
around? Lots of them, thousands and thousands of them. Black is not
a question of pigmentation. The Black I’m talking about is a historical
category, a political category, a cultural category. In our language, at
certain historical moments, we have to use the signifier. We have to
create an equivalence between how people look and what their his-
tories are. Their histories are in the past, inscribed in their skins. But
it is not because of their skins that they are Black in their heads.
I heard Black for the first time in the wake of the Civil Rights
53
..
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
movement, in the wake of the de-colonization and nationalistic strug-
gles. Black was created as a political category in a certain historical
moment. It was created as a consequence of certain symbolic and
ideological struggles. We said, “You have spent five, six, seven
hundred years elaborating the symbolism through which Black is a
negative factor. Now I don’t want another term. I want that term,
that negative one, that’s the one I want. I want a piece of that action.
I want to take it out of the way in which it has been articulated in
religious discourse, in ethnographic discourse, in literary discourse,
in visual discourse. I want to pluck it out of its articulation and re-
articulate it in a new way.”
In that very struggle is a change of consciousness, a change of
self-recognition, a new process of identification, the emergence into
visibility of a new subject. A subject that was always there, but
emerging, historically.
You know that story, but I do not know if you know the degree to
which that story is true of other parts of the Americas. It happened
in Jamaica in the 1970s. In the 1970s, for the first time, Black people
recognized themselves as Black. It was the most profound cultural
revolution in the Caribbean, much greater than any political revolu-
tion they have ever had. That cultural revolution in Jamaica has
never been matched by anything as far-reaching as the politics. The
politics has never caught up with it.
You probably know the moment when the leaders of both major
political parties in Jamaica tried to grab hold of Bob Marley’s hand.
They were trying to put their hands on Black; Marley stood for Black,
and they were trying to get a piece of the action. If only he would
look in their direction he would have legitimated them. It was not
politics legitimating culture, it was culture legitimating politics.
Indeed, the truth is I call myself all kinds of other things. When I
went to England, I wouldn’t have called myself an immigrant either,
which is what we were all known as. It was not until I went back
home in the early 1960s that my mother who, as a good middle-class
colored Jamaican woman, hated all Black people, (you know, that is
the truth) said to me, “I hope they don’t think you’re an immigrant
over there.”
And I said, “Well, I just migrated. I’ve just emigrated.” At that
very moment, I thought, that’s exactly what I am. I’ve just left home –
for good.
I went back to England and I became what I’d been named. I had
54
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
been hailed as an immigrant. I had discovered who I was. I started to
tell myself the story of my migration.
Then Black erupted and people said, “Well, you’re from the Carib-
bean, in the midst of this, identifying with what’s going on, the Black
population in England. You’re Black.”
At that very moment, my son, who was two and half, was learning
the colors. I said to him, transmitting the message at last, “You’re
Black.” And he said, “No. I’m brown.” And I said, “Wrong referent.
Mistaken concreteness, philosophical mistake. I’m not talking about
your paintbox, I’m talking about your head.” That is something dif-
ferent. The question of learning, learning to be Black. Learning to
come into an identification.
What that moment allows to happen are things which were not
there before. It is not that what one then does was hiding away
inside as my true self. There wasn’t any bit of that true self in there
before that identity was learnt. Is that, then, the stable one, is that
where we are? Is that where people are?
I will tell you something now about what has happened to that
Black identity as a matter of cultural politicS in Britain. That notion
was extremely important in the anti-racist struggles of the 1970s: the
notion that people of diverse societies and cultures would all come to
Britain in the fifties and sixties as part of that huge wave of migra-
tion from the Caribbean, East Africa, the Asian subcontinent, Paki-
stan, Bangladesh, from different parts of India, and all identified
themselves politically as Black.
What they said was, “We may be different actual color skins but
vis-a-vis the social system, vis-a-vis the political system of racism,
there is more that unites us than what divides us.” People begin to
ask II Are you from Jamaica, are you from Trinidad, are you from
Barbados?” You can just see the process of divide and rule. “No. Just
address me as I am. I know you can’t tell the difference so just call
me Black. Try using that. We all look the same, you know. Certainly
can’t tell the difference. Just call me Black. Black identity.” Anti-
racism in the seventies was only fought and only resisted in the com-
munity, in the localities, behind the slogan of a Black politicS and the
Black experience.
In that moment, the enemy was ethnicity. The enemy had to be
what we called “multi-culturalism.” Because multi-culturalism was
precisely what I called previously “the exotic.” The exotica of differ-
ence. Nobody would talk about racism but they were perfectly pre-
55
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
pared to have “International Evenings,” when we would all come
and cook our native dishes, sing our own native songs and appear in
our own native costume. It is true that some people, some ethnic
minorities in Britain, do have indigenous, very beautiful indigenous
forms of dress. I didn’t. I had to rummage in the dressing-up box to
find mine. I have been de-racinated for four hundred years. The last
thing I am going to do is to dress up in some native Jamaican cos-
Has the moment of the struggle organized around this constructed
Black identity gone away? It certainly has not. So long as that society
remains in its economic, political, cultural, and social relations in a
racist way to the variety of Black and Third World peoples in its
Why then don’t I just talk about a collective Black identity replac-
ing the other identities? I can’t do that either and I’ll tell you why.
The truth is that in relation to certain things, the question of Black,
in Britain, also has its silences. It had a certain way of silencing the
very specific experiences of Asian people. Because though Asian
people could identify, politically, in the struggle against racism, when
they came to using their own culture as the resources of resistance,
when they wanted to write out of their own experience and reflect on
position, when they wanted to create, they naturally
created within the histories of the languages, the cultural tradition,
the positions of people who came from a variety of different histor-
ical backgrounds. And just as Black was the cutting edge of a politics
vis-a-vis one kind of enemy, it could also, if not understood properly,
provide a kind of silencing in relation to another. These are the costs,
as well as the strengths, of trying to think of the notion of Black as
What is more, there were not only Asian people of color, but also
Black people who did not identify with that collective identity. So
that one was aware of the fact that always, as one advanced to meet
the enemy, with a solid front, the differences were raging behind.
Just shut the doors, and conduct a raging argument to get the troops
A third way in which Black was silencing was to silence some of
the other dimensions that were positioning individuals and groups in
exactly the same way. To operate exclusively through an unrecon-
structed conception of Black was to reconstitute the authority of
Black masculinity over Black women, about which, as I am sure you
56
tume and appear in the spectacle of multi-culturalism.
midst, and it continues to do so, that struggle remains.
their own
an essentialism.
together, to actually hit the other side.
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
know, there was also, for a long time, an unbreakable silence about
which the most militant Black men would not speak.
To organize across the discourses of Blackness and masculinity, of
race and gender, and forget the way in which, at the same moment,
Blacks in the under class were being positioned in class terms, in
similar work situations, exposed to the same deprivations of poor
jobs and lack of promotion that certain members of the white work-
ing class suffered, was to leave out the critical dimension of position-
ing.
What then does one do with the powerful mobilizing identity of
the Black experience and of the Black community? Blackness as a
political identity in the light of the understanding of any identity is
always complexly composed, always historically constructed. It is
never in the same place but always positional. One always has to
think about the negative consequences of the positionality. You can-
not, as it were, reverse the discourses of any identity simply by turn-
ing them upside down. What is it like to live, by attempting to
valorise and defeat the marginalization of the variety of Black sub-
jects and to really begin to recover the lost histories of a variety of
Black experiences, while at the same time recognizing the end of any
essential Black subject?
That is the politics of living identity through difference. It is the
politics of recognizing that all of us are composed of multiple social
identities, not of one. That we are all complexly constructed through
different categories, of different antagonisms, and these may have the
effect of locating us socially in multiple positions of marginality and
subordination, but which do not yet operate on us in exactly the
same way. It is also to recognize that any counter-politics of the local
which attempts to organize people through their diversity of identi-
fications has to be a struggle which is conducted positionally. It is the
beginning of anti-racism, anti-sexism, and anti-classicism as a war of
positions, as the Gramscian notion of the war of position.
The notion of the struggles of the local as a war of positions is a
very difficult kind of politics to get one’s head around; none of us
knows how to conduct it. None of us even knows whether it can be
conducted. Some of us have had to say there is no other political
game so we must find a way of playing this one.
Why is it difficult? It has no guarantees. Because identifications
change and shift, they can be worked on by political and economic
forces ou tside of us and they can be articulated in different ways.
57
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD.9V9TEM
There is absolutely no political guarantee already inscribed in an
identity. There is no reason on God’s earth why the film is good
because a Black person made it. There is absolutely no guarantee that
all the politics will be right because a woman does it.
There are no political guarantees of that kind. It is not a free-
floating open space because history has lodged on it the powerful,
tendential organization of a past. We bear the traces of a past, the
connections of the past. We cannot conduct this kind of cultural
politics without returning to the past but it is never a return of a
direct and literal kind. The past is not waiting for us back there to
recoup our identities against. It is always retold, rediscovered, rein-
vented. It has to be narrativized. We go to our own pasts through
history, through memory, through desire, not as a literal fact.
It is a very important example. Some work has been done, both in
feminist history, in Black history, and in working class history re-
cently, which recover the oral testimonies of people who, for a very
long time, from the viewpoint of the canon, and the authority of the
historian, have not been considered to be history-makers at all. That
is a very important moment. But it is not possible to Use oral his-
tories and testimonies, as if they are just literally, the truth. They
have also to be read. They are also stories, positionings, narratives.
You are bringing new narratives into play but you cannot mistake
them for some “real,” back there, by which history can be measured.
There is no guarantee of authenticity like that in history. One is
ever afterwards in the narrativization of the self and of one’s his-
tories. Just as in trying to conduct cultural politics as a war of posi-
tions, one is always in the strategy of hegemony. Hegemony is not
the same thing as incorporating everybody, of making everybody the
same, though (line-tenths of the people who have marginally read
Gramsci think that that is what he means. Gramsci uses the notion of
hegemony precisely to counteract the notion of incorporation.
Hegemony is not the disappearence or destruction of difference. It
is the construction of a collective will through difference. It is the
articulation of differences which do not disappear. The subaltern
class does not mistake itself for people who were born with silver
spoons in their mouths. They know they are still second on the
ladder, somewhere near the bottom. People are not cultural dopes.
They are not waiting for the moment when, like an overnight con-
version, false consciousness will fall from their eyes, the scales will
fall away, and they will suddenly discover who they are.
58
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
qt.> p,’–
They know something about who they are. If they engage in
another project it is because it has interpolated them, hailed them,
and established some point of identification with them. It has
brought them into the historical project. And that notion of a politics
which, as it were, increasingly is able to address people through the
multiple identities which they have understanding that those iden-
tities do not remain the same, that they are frequently contradictory,
that they cross-cut one another, that they tend to locate us differently
at different moments, conducting politics in the light of the con-
tingent, in the face of the contingent – is the only political game that
the locals have left at their disposal, in my view.
If they are waiting for a politics of manoeuvre, when all the locals,
in every part of the world, will all stand up at the same moment and
go in the same direction, and roll back the tide of the global, in one
great historical activity, it is not going to happen. I do not believe it
any more; I think it is a dream. In order to conduct the politics really
we have to live outside of the dream, to wake up, to grow up, to
come into the world of contradiction. We have to come into the
world of politics. There is no other space to stand in.
Out of that notion some of the most exciting cultural work is now
being done in England. Third generation young Black men and
women know they come from the Caribbean, know that they are
Black, know that they are British. They want to speak from all three
identities. They are not prepared to give up anyone of them.They
will contest the Thatcherite notion of Englishness, because they say
this Englishness is Black. They will contest the notion of Blackness
because they want to make a differentiation between people who are
Black from one kind of society and people who are Black from
another. Because they need to know that difference, that difference
that makes a difference in how they write their poetry, make their
films, how they paint. It makes a difference. It is inscribed in their
creative work. They need it as a resource. They are all those identities
together. They are making astonishing cultural work, the most
important work in the visual arts. Some of the most important work
in film and photography and nearly all the most important work in
popular music is coming from this new recognition of identity that I
am speaking about.
Very little of that work is visible elsewhere but some of you have
seen, though you may not have recognized, the outer edge of it.
Some of you, for example, may have seen a film made by Stephen
59
“”’oJuaiWA;?”
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
Freers and Hanif Kureishi, called My Beautiful Laundrette. This was
originally made as a television film for local distribution only, and
shown once at the Edinburgh Festival where it received an enormous
reception. If you have seen My Beautiful Laundrette you will know
that it is the most transgressive text there is. Anybody who is Black,
who tries to identify it, runs across the fact that the central characters
of this narrative are two gay men. What is more, anyone who wants
to separate the identities into their two clearly separate points
discover that one of these Black gay men is white and one of these
Black gay men is brown. Both of them are struggling in Thatcher’s
Britain. One of them has an uncle who is a Pakistani landlord who is
throwing Black people out of the window.
This is a text that nobody likes. Everybody hates it. You go to it
looking for what are called “positive images” and there are none.
There aren’t any positive images like that with whom one can, in a
simple way, identify. Because as well as the politics – and there is
certainly a politics in that and in Kureishi’s other film, but it is not a
politics which invites easy identification – it has a politics which is
grounded on the complexity of identifications which are at work.
I will read you something which Hanif Kureishi said about the
question of responding to his critics who said, “Why don’t you tell
us good stories about ourselves, as well as good/bad stories? Why
are your stories mixed about ourselves?” He spoke about the difficult
moral position of the writer from an oppressed or persecuted COm-
munity and the relation of that writing to the rest of the society. He
said it is a relatively new one in England but it will arise more and
more as British writers with a colonial lleritage and from a colonial
or marginal past start to declare themselves.
“There is sometimes,” he said, “too simple a demand for positive
images. Positive images sometimes require cheering fictions the
writer as Public Relations Officer. And I’m glad to say that the more
I looked at My Beautiful Laundrette, the less positive images I could
see. If there is to be a serious attempt to understand present-day
Britain with its mix of races and colors, its hysteria and despair, then
writing about it has to be complex. It can’t apologize, or idealize. It
can’t sentimentalize. It can’t attempt to represent anyone group as
having the total, exclusive, essential monopoly on virtue.
A jejune protest or parochial literature, be it black, gay or feminist,
is in the long run no more politically effective than works which are
merely public relations. What we need now, in this position, at this
60
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
1@4L i n:’r
time, is imaginative writing that gives us a sense of the shifts and the
difficulties within our society as a whole.
If contemporary writing which emerges from oppressed groups
ignores the central concerns and major conflicts of the larger society,
and if these are willing simply to accept themselves as marginal or
enclave literatures, they will automatically designate themselves as
permanently minor, as a sub-genre. They must not allow themselves
now to be rendered invisible and marginalized in this way by step-
ping outside of the maelstrom of contemporary history.”
(Following the lecture, questions were put from the audience.)
I have been asked to say: more about why I speak about the politics
of the local. I did not talk about other attempts to construct an alter-
native politics of the global principally because I have been trying to
trace through the question of ethnicity; the question of positioning, of
placing, which is what the term ethnicity connotes for me in relation
to issues of the local and the globaL And also, because in many
respects, I don’t think that those attempts to put together an alter-
native politics of the global are, at the moment, very successful.
But the second part of the qnestion is the more important one.
Why do I only talk about what is local when the questions I seem to
be addressing are, of course, very universal, global phenomena?
I do not make that distinction between the local and the globaL I
think there is always an interpretation of the two. The question is,
what are the locations at which struggles might develop? It seems to
me that a counter-politics which is pitched precisely and predom-
inantly at the level of confronting the global forces that are trying to
remake and recapture the world at the moment, and which are con-
ducted simply at that level, are not making very much headway.
Yet where there does seem the ability to develop counter-
movements, resistances, counter-politics, are places that are localized.
I do not mean that what they are about are “local” but the places
where they emerge as a political scenario localized because they
are separated from one another; they are not easy to connect up or
articulate into a larger struggle. So, I use the local and the global as
prisms for looking at the same thing. But they have pertinent appear-
ances, points of appearance, scenarios in the different locations.
There is, for instance, ecologically, an attempt to establish a
counter-politics of the planet as a pingle place and that, of course, is
61
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
important. And if I had taken the question of ecology rather than
ethnicityas the prism through which I spoke, the story would have
been told very differently. I hinted at that in my first talk when I said
that ecological consciousness was constituting the sense of the global,
and this is not necessarily entirely in the keeping of the advanced West.
So there is more than one political game bej.ng played. This isn’t
the only game. But if you came at it through the question of where
those who have moved into representation, into politics, as it were,
through the political movements that have been very powerful and
important in the post-war world, and especially in the last twenty
years, it is precisely their inability to connect up into one global poli-
tics which seems to be their difficulty. But when you try to find
whether they are able to resist, to mobilize, to say something differ-
ent to globalism at a more local level, they seem to have more pur-
chase on the historical present. That’s the reason why I concentrated
the story from that point of view. But it would be wrong to think
that you either work at one or the other, that the two are not con-
stantly interpenetrating each other.
What I tried to say in my first talk was that what we usually call
the global, far from being something which, in a systematic fashion,
rolls over everything, creating similarity, in fact works through par-
ticularity, negotiates particular spaces, particular ethnicities, works
through mobilizing particular identities and so on. So there is always
a dialectic, a continuous dialectic, between the local and the global.
I tried to identify those collective social identities in relation to cer-
tain historical processes. The other ones which have been talked
about are very important structurings, such as inside/outside, nor-
mal/pathological, etc. But they seem to recur: there are ways in
which the other identities are lived. You know if you are inside the
class, then you belong. If you are outside, then there is something
pathological, not normal or abnormal, or deviant about you.
So I think of those identities somewhat differently. I think of those
as ways of categorizing who is inside and who is outside in any of
the other social identities. I was trying to identify, historically, some
of the major ones that I think exist. If you say who you are you could
say where you came from; broadly speaking, what race you belong
to, a nation state of which you are a citizen or subject; you have a
class position, an established and relatively secure gender position.
You knew where you fitted in the world. That is what I meant,
whereas most of us now live with a sense of a much greater plural-
62
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
ity, a sense of the unfinished character of each of those. It is not that
they have disappeared but they do not stitch us in place, locate us, in
the way they did in the past.
Regarding a second question, as to what shifted on us: it was
politics. What shifted was our attempt to understand why the scenar-
io of the revolutionary class subject never appeared. What happened
to it?
There were a few moments when it appeared. When were those?
When you go back historically and look at those moments, they were
not on stage as they ought to have been either. 1917 is not the subject
of the unitary, already-identified Russian working class, making the
future. It was not that! The Chinese Revolution is not that either. Nor
is the seventeenth century, the history of the already formed bour-
geoisie taking the stage. Actually, they do not take the political stage
for another 200 years.
So if it is a bourgeois revolution in a larger sense, it cannot be
specified in terms of actual historical actors. So, we had a way of
living with that for a very long time. It is coming. Of course, it is
more complex than that but the basic grid is still ok.
But then, one asks oneself, what politicS flows from thinking it
never really happened like that, but one day it will? After a time, if
you are really trying to be politically active, in that setting you have
to say to yourself: that may be the wrong question. It may be that I
am not actually doing something now because I think that something
in the works, some God in the machine, some law of history which
I do not understand, is going to make it all right.
It is hard to describe this moment. It is a moment like waking up.
You suddenly realize you are relying on history to do what you can-
not do for yourself. You make a bungle of politics but “History,”
with a capital “H,” is going to fly out of somebody’s mouth at five
minutes to midnight and make it all right. Or “the Economy” is
going to march on the stage and sayI “you have got it all wrong, you
know. You ought to be over there: you are in the proletariat. You
ought to be thinking that.” Sort us all out, you know. And we are
waiting for that moment; waiting, waiting, waiting 200 years for it.
Maybe you are waiting for the wrong thing. Not that the insights
of that story, that theory, that narrative were wrong; I am not trying
to throw that over. I am trying to throw over the moment of the
political guarantee that is lodged in that, because then you do not
conduct politics contingently; you do not conduct it positionally. You
63
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
think someone has prepared the positions for you.
This is a very practical issue. You go into the miners’ strike, which
the British went into in the early eighties, the only major industrial
showdown with the Thatcher government, On the assumption that
the industrial working class was unified behind you when it was not.
And you did not conduct a politics which had the remotest chance of
unifying it because you assumed it was already unified.
If you said it seven times, it would be unified. So the miners’
leader said it seven times. “The might of the unified industrial work-
ing class is now in a head-to-head with Thatcher.” It was not. !twas
the wrong politics. Not the wrong struggle, but the wrong politics,
conducted in the wrong way, in the light of some hope that history
was going to rescue this simpler story out of the more complex one.
If you lose enough battles that way, you just do not play that game
any more. You have to play it differently. You have to try and make
some politics out of people who insist on remaining different. You
are waiting for them all to be the same. Before you get them inside
the same political movement you will be here till doomsday.
You have to make them out of the folks in this room, not out of
something else called socialism or whatever it is. We made history
out of figments. Suddenly you see that it is a kind of way of sleeping
at night: “I made a botch of that. I lost that one.” You know, the way
the left constantly told itself that all its losses were victories. You
know, I just won that although I lost it. Heroically, I lost it.
Just let us win one. Leave the heroism out of it. And just win a
few. The next time I will be in a little bit ahead. Not two steps
behind but feeling good in myself. That is a moment I am trying to
describe existentially. It did not happen like that. It happened in a
complicated set of ways. But you realize at a certain moment, you go
through a kind of transparent barrier that has kept you in a place,
from doing and thinking seriously, what you should have been
thinking about. That is what it is like.
Question: Could you then say something about winning one? Could
you say something about what prospect you see for rebuilding
another politics, other than the one Arthur Scargill headed in the
miners’ struggle. And what prospect that has for breaking down that
exclusivist, solidified, ego-identified consciousness?
SH: The prospects for that are not very good because the left is still
stuffed with the old notion of identity, which is why I am thinking
about it. It is still waiting for the old identities to return to the stage.
64
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
It does not recognize that it is in a different political game which is
required to articulate, precisely, differences that cannot be encap-
sulated any longer and represented in that unified body. So, we do
not know whether we can shift enough of that old thinking to begin
to ask the question. What would a politics like that be like?
We know a little bit about it. I do think, without being romantic
about it, that the period of the GLC (Greater London Council) in
London was very prefigurative, but that it cannot be repeated else-
where. It was the bringing together of groups and movements which
remained the same, and yet retained their differences. Nobody who
came into the GLC said “I will forget I am an activist black group
because I am now in the same room as a feminist group.” What you
heard there was the very opposite of what we now usually think of
as the conversation of a collective political subject coming into exis-
tence.,
We think of a nice, polite, consensual discussion; everybody agree-
ing. What you heard there was what democracy is really like: an
absolutely, bloody-unending row. People hammering the table, insist-
ing, “Do not ask me to line up behind your banner, because that just
means forgetting who I am.” That row, that sound of people actually
negotiating their differences in the open, behind the collective pro-
gram, is the sound I am waiting for.
I think it did something; it opened some possibilities. It showed
that it was possible. It had exactly what politics always has, which is
the test, that differences do not remain the same as a result of the
articulation.
One group has to take on the agenda of the other. It has to trans-
form itself in the course of coming into alliance, or some kind of
formation with another. It has to learn something of the otherness
which created the other constituency. It doesn’t mistake itself that it
becomes it but it has to take it on board. It has to struggle with it to
establish some set of priorities.
That is the sound that one is waiting for but on the whole, that is
not the sound one is hearing in the politics opposed to Thatcherism.
One is hearing “Let us go back to the old constituencies. Line up
behind us. The old parties will come again.” I do not believe it. I
think Thatcherism is more deep-seated than that; it is actually shak-
ing the ground from underneath the possibility of a return to that old
form of politics. So if you ask me what the possibilities are, then the
first stage of it is in our own ranks. It is quarrelling among ourselves
65
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
about which direction to go before one begins to open that out.
But I do think that there are possibilities in that. I think the reason
why, in spite of the fact that the GLC was never below 60-65 percent
in the popularity ratings, Thatcherism nevertheless destroyed it, was
because it understood its prefigurative role. It understood that if it
could persist, and make some changes to the lives of a variety of dif-
ferent constituencies in that city, other peoples would begin to say,
“Here is a different kind of model. Here is a different way to go.”
What would that mean on a more national scale? What would that
mean in another part of the country where the constituencies are
different?
I think Thatcherism understood that and it blew the GLC out of
the water. It destroyed it by legislative fiat. That tells you how im-
portant they knew it actually was. Thatcherism’s popularity and
hegemonic reach precisely arises from the fact that it articulates dif-
ferences. The numbers of people who are 100 percent with the project
on all fronts are very small indeed. What Thatcherism is fantastic at
is the skill of mobilizing the different minorities and playing one
minority against another. It is in the game of articulating differences.
It always tries to condense them within something it calls “the
Thatcherite subject” but there is no such thing. That is a political
representation. It is the condensation of a variety of different identi-
ties. It plays on difference, and through difference, all the time. It
tries to represent that difference as the same. But do not be mistaken
about it. I do not think that is so.
Conducting the counter-hegemonic politics which I have been try-
ing to describe does not carry any guarantees that it will win. All
that I am saying is that there is a difference between the politics of
positionality I have been outlining and some unitary politics which
is successful, which is Thatcherism. That is not the difference. The
difference is between two politics of positionality; one well-conducted
and one which is conducted very half-heartedly, and which is,
indeed, not being conducted at all.
Thatcherism is hegemonic because it is able to address the iden-
tities of a variety of people who have never been in the same political
camp before. It does that in a very complex way by always attending,
through its political, social, moral and economic program, to the cul-
tural and ideological questions. Always mobilizing that which it
represents as already there. It says lithe majority of English people.”
liThe majority of the British people.”
66
OLD AND NEW IDENTITIES
It does not have yet a majority. It is summoning up the majority
and telling you that it is already a majority. And in the majority are
a variety of people, people from different classes, people from differ-
ent genders, people from different occupations, people from different
parts of the country. That’s what the Thatcherite majority is.
Next time round it will not be exactly the same. It cannot repro-
duce itself. It is not the essential class subject. That is not the politics
of Thatcherism. Indeed, far from iti my own view is that no-one
understands Gramsci better than Mrs. Thatcher. She has never read
it but she does know that politics nowadays is conducted through
the articulation of different instances. She knows that politics is con-
ducted on different fronts. You have to have a variety of programs,
that you are always trying to build a collective will because no
socio-economic position will simply give it to you.
Those things she knows. We read Gramsci till the cows come home
and we do not know how to do it. She cannot get a little bit of it off the
ground. It is called “instinctive Gramsci-ism.” “Instinctive Gramsci-ism”
is what is beating us, not the old collective class subject.
Question: This idea of multiple identities, which you represented in
some kind of “pie-chart.” You gave an example of people who are
Caribbean, British and Black. Is there five or ten percent or some-
thing which can be called “Humanity?”
SH: I do not think that there is. I think that what we call ‘the globaY
is always composed of varieties of articulated particularities. I think
the global is the self-presentation of the dominant particular. It is a
way in which the dominant particular localizes and naturalizes itself
and associates with it a variety of other minorities.
What I think it is dangerous to do is to identify the global with
that sort of lowest common denominator stake which we all have in
being human. In that sense, I am not a humanist. I do not think we
can mobilize people simply through their common humanity. It may
be that that day will come but I do not think we are there yet. Both
the sources of the powerful, and the sources of the powerless, we
both, always, go towards those universal moments through locating
ourselves through some particularity. So I think of the global as
something having more to do with the hegemonic sweep at which a
certain configuration of local particularities try to dominate the whole
scene, to mobilize the technology and to incorporate, in subaltern
positions, a variety of more localized identities to construct the next
historical project.
67
.”
CULTURE, GLOBALIZATION AND THE WORLD-SYSTEM
I am deliberately using Gramscian terms construct the hege-
monic project, the historical project, in which is lodged a variety of
differences but which are all committed either in a dominant, or a
subaltern position, to a single historical project, which is the project
of globalization, of the kind I think you are talking about.
That is what is “universal.” I think universal is always in quotation
marks. It is the universalizing aspect, the universalizing project, the
universalizing hope to be universal. It is like Mrs. Thatcher’s”All the
British people,” It is a way of trying to say everybody is now inside
this particular form of globalization. And at that very moment” there
I am. I remain Marxist. At that very moment, whenever the discourse
declares itself to be closed is the moment when you know it is con-‘
tradictory. You know, when it says, “Everything is inside my knap-
sack. I have just got hold of all of you. I have a bit of all of you now,
You are inside the bag. Can I close it?” No.
Something is just about to open that out and present a problem.
Hegemony, in that sense, is never completed. It is always trying to
enclose more differences within itself. Not within itself. It doesn’t
want the differences to look exactly like it. But it wants the projects
of its individual and smaller identities to be only possible if the
larger one becomes possible. That is how Thatcherism locates smaller
identities within itself. You want to have the traditional family? You
cannot do it for yourself because it depends on larger political and
economic things. If you want to do that, you must come inside my
larger project. You must identify yourself with the larger things
inside my project. That is how you become part of history. You
become a little cog in the larger part of history.
Now that is a different game from saying,”I want everybody to be
exactly a replica of me.” It is a more complicated game. But there is
a moment when it always declares itself to be universal and closed,
and that is the moment of naturalization. That’s the moment when it
wants its boundaries to be coterminous with the truth, with the real-
ity of history. And that is always the moment which, I think, escapes
That’s my hope. Something had better be escaping it.
68
We provide professional writing services to help you score straight A’s by submitting custom written assignments that mirror your guidelines.
Get result-oriented writing and never worry about grades anymore. We follow the highest quality standards to make sure that you get perfect assignments.
Our writers have experience in dealing with papers of every educational level. You can surely rely on the expertise of our qualified professionals.
Your deadline is our threshold for success and we take it very seriously. We make sure you receive your papers before your predefined time.
Someone from our customer support team is always here to respond to your questions. So, hit us up if you have got any ambiguity or concern.
Sit back and relax while we help you out with writing your papers. We have an ultimate policy for keeping your personal and order-related details a secret.
We assure you that your document will be thoroughly checked for plagiarism and grammatical errors as we use highly authentic and licit sources.
Still reluctant about placing an order? Our 100% Moneyback Guarantee backs you up on rare occasions where you aren’t satisfied with the writing.
You don’t have to wait for an update for hours; you can track the progress of your order any time you want. We share the status after each step.
Although you can leverage our expertise for any writing task, we have a knack for creating flawless papers for the following document types.
Although you can leverage our expertise for any writing task, we have a knack for creating flawless papers for the following document types.
From brainstorming your paper's outline to perfecting its grammar, we perform every step carefully to make your paper worthy of A grade.
Hire your preferred writer anytime. Simply specify if you want your preferred expert to write your paper and we’ll make that happen.
Get an elaborate and authentic grammar check report with your work to have the grammar goodness sealed in your document.
You can purchase this feature if you want our writers to sum up your paper in the form of a concise and well-articulated summary.
You don’t have to worry about plagiarism anymore. Get a plagiarism report to certify the uniqueness of your work.
Join us for the best experience while seeking writing assistance in your college life. A good grade is all you need to boost up your academic excellence and we are all about it.
We create perfect papers according to the guidelines.
We seamlessly edit out errors from your papers.
We thoroughly read your final draft to identify errors.
Work with ultimate peace of mind because we ensure that your academic work is our responsibility and your grades are a top concern for us!
Dedication. Quality. Commitment. Punctuality
Here is what we have achieved so far. These numbers are evidence that we go the extra mile to make your college journey successful.
We have the most intuitive and minimalistic process so that you can easily place an order. Just follow a few steps to unlock success.
We understand your guidelines first before delivering any writing service. You can discuss your writing needs and we will have them evaluated by our dedicated team.
We write your papers in a standardized way. We complete your work in such a way that it turns out to be a perfect description of your guidelines.
We promise you excellent grades and academic excellence that you always longed for. Our writers stay in touch with you via email.